Saudi health officials follow insights from
recent review and add 100 confirmed MERS infections that were previously
misclassified, raising the total in that country to 575 cases.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Saudi Arabia
continues to wrestle with controlling the sometimes deadly Middle Eastern
Respiratory Syndrome virus. On Tuesday, Saudi officials, after examining a
careful review, added 100 confirmed MERS cases to their growing number of
infections, cases that had been previously undocumented. To date, MERS has been
confirmed in 575 individuals in Saudi Arabia. The illness has claimed the lives
of 282 MERS patients. Fifty-three patients with confirmed MERS are currently
undergoing medical treatment.
The new
report came on the heels of the removal of Saudi Arabia’s deputy health minister,
Ziad Memish, by acting Health Minister Adel Faqih. Less than two months ago,
King Abdullah fired the Kingdom’s top health official. The removal of the
ministers highlights concerns about the nation’s ability to manage the spread
of MERS.
The revision
is the result of a full review of previous cases launched to provide a better
understanding of how the virus spreads, according to Dr. Tariq Madany, head of
the Saudi medical advisory council.
“The
ministry is committed to providing all the data concerning the coronavirus and
putting polices in place to protect public health,” Madany is quoted as saying.
“Though the review showed confirmed cases that needed to be added, we are still
witnessing a decline in the number of newly registered cases in the past few
weeks.”
The virus
that causes MERS is a coronavirus, a type of RNA virus that also includes the
virus that causes the common cold and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, or
SARS. There are no cures or specific treatments available for MERS virus,
although some drugs approved for otherapplications show promise in managing the spread of the
virus, which may jump from camels to humans.
In a 2003
pandemic, SARS killed approximately 800 people. The World Health Organization
said last month that MERS has not yet become a pandemic or global emergency but
that the organization continues to monitor the spread of the virus and work
with health officials in individual nations that have or are at risk of
developing MERS infections.
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